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Old 26-07-2004, 02:02 AM
David Soukal
 
Posts: n/a
Default [IBC] sudden increase of leaf loss of our fukien tree

ps. I have another question, if I may. I'd like to buy a bonsai for my
wife as a birthday present. As I mentioned, there's no bonsai nursery
in the neighborhood (New York upstate). Do you have any experience
with on-line shopping? I was told, in the garden shopmy wife bought
the Fukien tree, that on-line shopping won't hurt the plant. But you
don't have much control over the plant selection of course. I would
appreciete any suggestion as to what shops are good and what aren't.
For example, I've read somewhere that BonsaiBoys.com isn't the right
place. But what is?

Thank you!


(Jim Lewis) wrote in message news:004e01c47268$0dd5d7e0$bb102cc7@pavilion...
Hello,

we haven't repotted the tree yet. But we do keep it indoors.

This is
our first bonsai and the book we bought said that it should be

kept
inside, since it is, supposedly, sensitive to draft. Also, we

don't
have garden, since we live in an appartment...

We could buy some extra light and / or open the windows more.


At least give it as MUCH light as you can. A fluorescent light
right overhead for a LONG day is about right, according to the
indoor growers on the list. Beyond that, I don't know diddly
about growing inside the house.



Another thing I forgot to mention is that we removed about a

half inch
of the soil from the top and replaced it with another one. The

reason
why we did that was that the soil was full of rotting leaves

and
flowers... Only later, we found out that the soil we purchased

doesn't
probably have the right composition. It was about 70% of fired

clay
and only about 25% of pine soil.


That sounds almost EXACTLY the right mix for bonsai. What kind
of soil was underneath? Bonsai soil wants to be large particles
and relatively small amount of organic material.

This is a good time to repot most tropicals (but let a fukien tea
expert advise you on whether it is right for one of these,
please. I'm NOT the one whose advice you want to take for
trpicals.).


I noticed that this layer probably
prevents the rest of the soil from breathing so it's possible

the we
kept that plant overwatered for a several hours.. Could that be

the
reason?


Nah. It would take more than "several hours" of wet feet to
cause a problem. Some trees just complain when fiddled with.

Jim Lewis -
- Tallahassee, FL - Bonsaiests
are like genealogists: We know our roots!

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